During
and after the 2001 attacks on New York City and Washington, thousands of
photographs were taken. None, however, would become as iconic as Thomas
Franklin's photo of three firefighters raising an American flag above the
rubble of the World Trade Center. Franklin's photo, I argue in this essay,
casts 9/11 in the familiar myth of American exceptionalism, screening out but
still gesturing to the heterogeneous memories left unsettled and animate in
amateur photographs, missing-person posters, bodies in pain, and performance.
In considering the struggle over the visual memory of the attacks, I first
consider how, in the wake of 9/11, the discourse of exceptionalism served to
disavow the exceptions historically taken by the state and to rationalize the
War on Terror. I show how this system of myths works in dialectical relation to
other disruptive forms of cultural memory. I then read Franklin's iconic
photograph as a screen by which traumatic memories are masked and onto which
nationalist desires are projected. Finally, I analyze 9/11 photography that
troubles the exceptionalist optics of Franklin's photo by evoking the visual
legacy of the Vietnam War and so challenging the logic of righteous warfare.
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/social-sciences-and-humanities/american-research-journal-of-history-and-culture/
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/social-sciences-and-humanities/american-research-journal-of-history-and-culture/
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